co:iP.
iz.'r.?.?. ssar ion
EUaSriiiT.O.iiiG.
Governor Says Legislature Inadequacies Range From Tragedy To Regret
Editors Not: The following cri.
tique of the 1963 Oregon Legisla
'presented. On January 14 further
the additions of welfare staff
i providing a new emphasis on re-
adequacies described in terms
ranging from tragedy to regret.
In some specific categories t h e
conquer space but we deny thou
sands for preparedness at home
a sad commentary on our value
judgments. And. we watch pro
posals for improvement of work
men's compensation slammed
back and forth in legalistic and
parliamentary maneuvers of de
lay and diversion Uiat lengthen
the session, and inflame the tem
pers of temperate men a sorry
will one day have to provide a
basic reform that will provide a
more equitable and adequate tax
program. Oregonians, through
their demands over the years,
have developed a "high service"
past. The proposals endorsed
by a legislative interim committee
were killed.
Other interim committee rec
ommendations, the product of two
years of study, were for the most
part ignored. This, plus the refus
al to submit to the people pro
posals for revenue reform and for
reconstituting our government is
in itself an indictment of legis
lative inaction.
And what of the future, of suc
for the return of those who la
bored in this regular session.
duced to seek membership in the
recommendations were made in
my message to the legislature. It
was obvious in both instances that
it would take courage and fore
sight to support the broad reforms
recommended.
A governor, in choosing his rec
ture has been written expressly
legislature. Whether a "better"
legislature or "worse" will be
seated depends on how informed
the individual citizen becomes be
habiliatiom. for the elfons to
ward identification and treatment
of sex deviates, for the extension
lor l PI by Gov. Mark Hatfield.
performance was. at best, inade
quate. That constitution revision
was not referred to the people is
a discouragement to those of both
parties who worked so construc
tively on the document and a fur
ther delay in providing Oregon
with a constitution equal to our
There will be those who say a
legislature is known as much by
the bills it does not approve as
Other reviews will be carried Sat
urday and Monday from House
Speaker Clarence Barton and Sen
ate President Ben Musa. Hat
field's . conclusion: . "M o d e s t
of concern for the senior citizens
in medicare and homestead re
tention, for the legal armament
in the war on traific fatalities,
for the creation of a department
state but our population cannot
support such a standard of govern
mental excellence without further
for the legislation it enacts. In
tween now and then una how
clearly he recognizes the impact
this legislature has made on his
daily life and that of his family.
some measure, the peddlers of,
ommendations has two alterna
achievement, massive inaction,
tives. He can set major signifi
cant goals that are in the people's
interest, in the broadest sense.
the status quo have won a vic
tory. But if the people prefer a
more constructive approach to the
notable mistakes."
By GOV. MARK HATFIELD
Written for
United Press International
SALEM (LPK-Six months ago,
on December 1, the budget pro
pram of this administration was
of commerce, the legislature may
well take pride in meaninelul
influx of new industry and an ex
needs.
per lorn
As w
formance indeed.
pansion of existing payrolls.
Hie democratic process pro
needs of our state, they will have
or he can timidly ask for what
he thinks he can get without con
troversy. In neither case can he
expect to bat 1.000 per cent.
vides for periodic review of the
actions of the people's represent
atives. The decisions of 1964 will
declare the people's appraisal of
tlie value of 141 days of modest
achievement, massive inaction,
and notable mistakes.
achievement.
But any measurement of the
The dismantling of civil de
ith previous sessions.
an opportunity to so express
themselves at the polls in 1964.
With more adequate legislative
fense, an action that may be
emulated elsewhere in a wave of
irrationality, must give aid and
comfort to the Kremlin and Cuba
patches were added to the crazy
quilt of inequitable exemptions,
allowances, and rates to our tax
structure. Tile legislature failed
to face up to what its successors
In a special message 1 pled for
labor - management legislation
cessive legislative sessions? Un
longest, costliest, and the first
fairly-compensated legislature in
the state's history must note in
which would deal with the devas
less there are problems I do not
pay, candidates who previously
could not afford a biennial winter
and spring in Salem may be in-
Of my 64 major recommenda
tating strikes and lockouts which
have crippled our economy in the
now lorcsce, little would be
gained by calling a special session
tions. 3!) have been adopted. For
and China. We spend billions to
In The-
Day's Aevvs
By FRANK JENKINS
Do you remember the Walrus in
Lewis Carroll's Through the Look-ing-Glass?
If so. you will recall
that at a certain point it struck an
attitude and remarked:
"The time has come (the Wal
lus said)
"To talk of many things:
"Of shoes and ships and
sealing wax
"Of cabbages and kings
"And why the sea is boiling
hot -
"And whether pigs have
wings.
Well -
The news today is like that.
Let's talk first about tlie kings.
It is reported from Geneva this
morning that President Kennedy
and Premier Khrushchev are near
agreement on the much-talkcd-oi
HOT LINE which would be a tel
etype line running overland from
Moscow to London and tlience by
ocean cable to the National Com
mand Center in Washington and
from there directly to the White
House.
The idea is that in the last final
pinch, when it looked like nuclear
war was inevitable and just about
to begin, President JFK and Pre
mier Kroosh could get together
over the hot line and call it off.
It sounds wonderful.
But there's a (ly in the ointment.
This is the (ly:
Of Lenin's Ten Commandments,
this is tlie Ninth: "Promises are
like piecrust: Made to be broken."
Suppose Mr. Kroosh DID agree
to call il off? How could we know
lie would keep his word?
Now for the cabbages.
In Verona. Italy, a leopard es
caped yesterday from the cily zoo.
The watchman at a nearby pub
lic school 'saw tlie animal and
called the police. The police
called the zoo's animal keeper,
who hurried to the scene, made
the same noises he makes each
day when he feeds the animals
and the leopard came running up,
hungry and docile.
The leopard's philosophy:
"Whose bread 1 eat, his song 1
ing."
And-
ln San Francisco tlie other day.
(Continued on Page 4-At
9-Day Funeral Rites
Begin For Late Pope
VATICAN CITY UP1 - Nine;
davs of funeral riles for Pope
John XXHI began today in the
basilica under which his body
lic entombed.
The scries of services in St. Pe
ter's, the largest church in Chris
tendom, will last until June 17.
two davs before the Sacred
1
lege of Cardinals meets to choose
a successor to Pope John, wno -
j.a Mnnlav at the a2e of 81 1
Irom a stomach tumor neuevea
to be cancerous.
The Pope's triple coliin was
placed in the grottoes below the
church Thursday among the
lombs of past pop" and kin:s'
and was bricked up in a plain
niche adorned only ith a plaque
of the Madonna.
Body Will Be Moved
It will be moved later to tlie
Roman Church of St. John or an intern Europe, one is coming
adjoining palace, as requested in j aiK) the other slaying behind the
the Pope's will. i Iron Curtain. Stefan Cardinal
More than a million mourners ! Wyszjnski of Poland will alteisd
said farewell to the pontiff in thojlhc conclave; Joszef Cardinal
33 hours of public viewing that! Mindszenty of Hungary will re
preceded interment. Tlie unprece-l main m the U.S. legation in Bu
intt inrnni'l was a measure ol dapest.
the public affection for the peas-
ants son whose reign lasted I
scarceiv lour and one-nan ears.
Another sicn ol the warmth felt
for Pone John and of tbciian was Hadrian vi. a
u: ni. f h . nrwr jc
. ,j ur iha. rails
L, marin aireidv for sainthood
for the pontiff. Gregory Peter Cardinal Asagian-jEDT.
"Papa Santo'' the holy pope'ian. who was born in Armenia.
manv voices cried out during now part of the Soviet Union.
the long pilgrimage past his cata j
cu... iha basilica Several '
Italian newspapers quoted an un
named Vatican prelate as having
Weather
Klamath Falls, Tuleleke eno" Lakeview:
Parity cloudy tonight and Saturday. Lowi
lomghl JS-40. High Saturday sail. North
trly windi s-ll m.p.h. Weekend weather
lilllc change with some cloudiness and
cool tempralur.s.
High yesterday aa
Low this morning js
High year ago js
Low year ago as
Precip. past 24 hours 0
Since Jan. I s.f!
Same period last year a.ll
SJnemp
19,000 Men Idled
In Wood Industry
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP1I -Some
19,000 workers are expected
to be idled because of strikes or
shutdowns in the lumber industry
from Northern California to Wash
ington by tonight.
Vice president Lowry Wyatt of
Weyerhaeuser Co.. said Thursdav
all operations of his firm and
those of International Paper,
Crown Zellerbach and Rayonicr
at which members of the Inter
national W oodworkers of America
or the lumber and sawmill work
ers union are employed would be
closed alter the last shift today.
The closure is in retaliation for
a strike by the two unions against
St. Regis Paper Co., and U. S.
Plywood Corp.. two other mem
bers of the Northwest big six
lumber products firms. The strike
was called after negotiations over
a new contract were broken off.
There were indications that
talks might be resumed soon. In
a statement announcing the shut
down Wednesday, the big six
pledged to continue negotiations j
whenever the unions requested.
Harvey Nelson, regional prcsi.
dent of the IWA, said his union
is willing to return to the bar
gaining table "anytime the com
panies are w illing to make a rea
sonable offer."
The two sides remain a long
way apart on wages, and appar-
ently
some other issues as
well.
Both unions turned down a corti-1
pany offer of a 22-cent per hour
wage increase over a three-year
period. The IWA had modilied its
original 4K?ents demand to .15
said
"In the early centuries of
tlie church, the people would al
ready have proclaimed him a
saint."
In this century, there is no
i-annniTntinn hu ni-rlamntinn It
. 3
a long and complicated proc-r
ess. But many of the world's half j
Col-'billion Catholics already feel cer-
. Irilei tluiU AC lhiit hiLf4pAn ill I
lain they or their children will I
ue Fiawuj, iu u uic puuuu as
a saim.
Two-Thirds Vole Needed
On June 19. tlie College of Car-j
dinals. the Pope's aides and ad-
visers during his lifetime, begin
their secret conclave to elect his
successor. The actual ballotincl
starts June 20. A two-thirds ma-
Ijority is required.
About 40 of too 82 cardinals al-
i ready are in Rome and others
are arriving constantly. Of the
two cardinals in Communist
For the first time in centuries,
a non-Italian is being given a
cnam-e mr rnriu"!i "n hi
observers here. The last nnn-ltal-
Dutch -
man who reK'nefl in in iLh
renturv.
Soeculation centered around
One Italian newspaper. Milan's
Corriere Delia Sera, also men -
itioned Richard Cardinal Cushing.
archbishop ol Boston.
Price Ten Cents 20 Pages
loyment
cents. The LSW originally asked
60 cents.
Nelson charged the companies
have refused to make a fair
wage olfcr and have given no
consideration to travel time pay
for loggers. He said many loggers
travel more than four hours a day
in addition to their regular eight
hour work schedule.
"The employers also have tried
to take away the privilege of a
Monday through Friday work
schedule which the union gained
before tlie War Labor Board in
1942," Nelson contended.
The companies asked that firms
operating on weekend schedule
be allowed to pay workers at
regular instead of overtime rates
for weekends.
Meanwhile, work is continuity?
under provisions of old contracts
at 196 smaller firms represented
by the timber operators council
and at numerous independent
companies. Wyatt, in a press con
ference in Seattle, said it was un
likely that any of them would
join the big six in closing
Nelson indicated no more strike
action is contemplated by his un
ion immediately.
In answer to a question about
furtlter Canadian inroads into
American lumber markets as a
result of the strike, Wyatt said,
"I don't suppose they're unliappy.
about this."
-iKniil tliie
Troops Back
College Move
WASHINGTON lUPIl The
federal government is prepared
to use troops to integrate the
University of Alabama next week
if necessary over the objections
of Gov. George Wallace.
A high government official, who
Is close to the President, said
Thursday the government had no
intention of sending U.S. mar
shals to get into a "shoving
mal.-ti" ilL lU.n,. .1:.. v
"' """ - m..
g"s, he said, "are going to at-
tend the university.
1.001 I -
The decision on w hether there
is going to be federal troops used'
1 18 UP " w)v- ""uace. "e "'1
"We don't w ant to us' troops,
We want it handled like it was
Lt rkmn
. v . , . .
A ' c8ro "uacnl enlerM ck!m":
50n Co'S in Soul" Carolina
peacefully last January. I
President
ABOARD I'SS KITTY HAWK
'UPD President Kennedy, aft -
er another round of naval wea-
pons demonstrations in the Mo-
jave Desert, planned a carelully
protected venture today in the
tangled world of California Demo-
k""j r"""
Following an overnight cruise
aboard Ihe I'SS Kitty Hawk, anibond was having contributed $1,000'
iWi.iisMnn LTUioca missile aiiach'fT more lo ine uemocrauc oarivimore inan aii vessels wniiii paiuci -
laircraft carrier. Kennedy w a s
scheduled to fly ashore at 1 p m I
His destination was the China
'Uke naval ordnanie testing sta-ilhe
lion at China Lake, lalil . a vastiurging them to keep up the good
experimental installation on t h e work, particularly contributions to!
cdce of the hot Mojave Desert,
Moving again by helicopter, the
Fund Ruling
I all.
. j.iaa. " " .aw "
t-XZJJni -
THEY KNOW COWS 4-H
the annual June Dairy Tour
ed youths lined fence at Jo
started at IP a.m. Lunch and afternoon judging wi at
Teen Unemployment
Reaches Danger Point
WASHINGTON IUPH Fasdcould not find them in May. This
mounting teen-age unemployment
stood at a postw ar peak today and
. .L w. willard Wirtz
warned it might become one of
tlie most "explosive" social prob
lems in U.S. history.
. '
The jobless rate among youths
under 20 climbed to nearly 18 per
cent in May to surpass previous
recession levels in 1U5S and reach
its highest point since 1940.
This helped to push up the na
tional unemployment rate to 5.9
per cent of tlie labor force a
rise of .1 from April alter allow
ance lor the usual seasonal trends.
New government figures re
leased Thursday showed 4.066.000
Americans looked for jobs and
Solons Suggest Limit
On FBI Chief Service
WASHINGTON UPI - The
judicary Committee,
looking beyond tlie eventual re
tirement of J. Ednar Hoover.
m,.,,, , iirnil .1,. .,.
director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to a term of 15
years.
The committee also approved
without dissent some other plans
for the day Hoover leaves the of-1
ice he has occupied for 30 years.
If Congress approves, the ncxtThomas J. Dodd, D-Conn.
Kennedy
President planned to hop from1
China Lake to the Beverly llil-
ton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.
To Attend Dinner
At tlie hole! tnniglit. Kennedy
will attend a closed dinner given
in his honor by the President'sllics, the United Stales
Club of Los Angeles, an organi -
Ration of those w hose common
this year.
Tlie dinner will be closed lo the
press Kennedy planned to visit vancet in space and in the air...
around from table to table withjlhis country must still move eas-
tup contributors, presumably I ily and salely across the seas of
jthe party war chest lor the 19M
. elections.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1963
,,,,, iiitawpw ;
Ik 9
A
liI
Dairy Club members outnumbered adults taking cart In
Jurt 6. Judging was on Holsteins and Guernseys. Interest-
Bair Dairy Rancryin the
figure held steady although it
normally drops by 200.000 or more
at this time of year. Employment
rose by 850.000 to a May record
of 69.061.000.
But the spurt in teen-age job
lessnessan increase of 300.000
to 1.2 million last month was re
garded by Wirtz as the critical
weak spot in the economy. One of
every four jobless Americans is a
teen-ager.
Manpower expert Harold Gold
stein explained that the size of tlie
teen labor force was swollen be
cause tlie "war babies" born dur
ing or immediately after World
War II now were grown up and
seeking work.
FBI director will be appointed by
the president and conlirmcd by
the Senate, and will not he eli
gible for renomination alter he
'completes the initial 15-year
term.
The committee voted to keep
the FBI director's salary at the
present level of $22 000 a year.
The bill was introduced by Sen-
ate Republican Leader Everett
M. Dirksen, 111., and seconded
Iwithin tlie committee by Sen.
Plans Political Talk
Alter watching a task force of
Ihe U.S. First Fleet in action off
the California coast Thursday,
Kennedy was more convinced
lhan ever that to protect the se -
(iirity ol this country and her al-
must con
ltrol the seas."
Mutt Control Sett
Sneaking In tlie men of
the
nated in Ihe exercises, the Prcsi-
dent taid "in spite of (he ad-
the worm. cimi rignis situation urn racial
He said tlie blockade of C'ubajtensions with several hundred
last fall showed that control ol
I the teat meant security andjenct ol Mayors.
ought In Wood Dispute
K
Midland District where) tour
Kay MoPion uairy near Merrill,
Dairy Club
Tests Held
Judging competition was close
in the annual June Dairy Judging
Contest June 6 in which both
adults and 4-H Dairy Club mem
bers participated. A number of
dairy club leaders were present.
About 75 persons visited tlie
dairy farms of Joe Bair in the
Midland District and May Hobson
at Merrill, where they were guests
of tlie Klamath Dairymen's Asso
ciation at a picnic-style lunch.
Individual trophies to tlie win-,
ners in three divisions went to 4-H
Club member Josephine Scala,
junior division. Midland Dairy
Club, for contestants under 15
years: Steve iteiling, intermedi
ate division, Poe Valley, Olene
Dairy Club: Ida Scala, senior di
vision leader of tlie Midland
Dairy Club.
The club trophy went to the
Olene Dairy Club led by Bob
Laver.
Dairy princess contestants, Nan
cy Wenz, Cathy Iloss and Jean
Lee, attended tlie tour.
Pact Signed
SALEM (UPD-Gov. Mark Hat
field Thursday signed tlie Oregon-
California (ioose Lake interstate
compact which was approved by
the 1963 Oregon Legislature.
The compact requires approval
of the Cahlornia Legislature and
the U S. Congress before it goes
inlo effect.
It provides for supervision of
water allocations from the Goose
Lake drainage basin on Die Ore
gon-California border.
peaie
j Following his Democratic din-
ner in Ios Angeles tonight, the
Chief Executive has another po-
'litical date in tlie California me-
ttnnohs Saturday morning meet
ing with a group of Democratic
women. He was expected to
siend the rest of Saturday rest
ing at the Sanla Monica beach
mm mi iinni:i-iii-ia, anui i mi
Lawford.
Saturday night tlie President
will depart Us Angelet by jet
for Hawaii where he hat a Sun-
day afternoon date to discuss the
delegate, to the National Confer-1
Telephone
Local Official Says Law
Denies Fund In Such Cases
Tlie prospect that 750 members,
of the International Woodworkers
of America, Local Union 3-12,
would become eligible for stale un
employment bond its follow ing the
"lockout" to commence later to-
day at the local Weyerhaeuser
Company plant was a remote
possibility, according to the opin
ion of Leonard Sytsma. state em
ployment ofliccr at Klamath
Falls.
The lockout at Weyerhaeuser
and three other Northwest lumber
producers forming the Big Six de
veloped following a breakdown in
negotiations over a new contract
between the union and representa
tives of the timber companies.
F.ailier this ik the union
i oneed a walkout nt the St. Rcis
I Paper Company and U.S. Ply-
(wood, two members of the iBig
Six, while negotiations were con
tinuing In Portland between the
two sides. Later, the remaining
four members of the lumber group
voted for the closure on tlie pre
sumption that "a strike against
one was a strike against all." A
spokesman for the Big Six com
mented that "it is evident that
Rose Festival
Opens Today
PORTLAND (UPli Portland's
55th Rose Festival opens lato to
day under cloudy skies and with
the threat of showers.
The official program gets under
way with tlie p.m. opening of
the Rose Festival Center, a com
plex of carnival and bobby activ
ity, at Holladay Park.
The lively Merrykhana parade
is Saturday night following a day
of events including the junior
Olympic track meet at Grant bowl
and tlie 4th annual West Coast
rifle and pistol tournament at
Camp Withycombc.
Tlie Rose Queen will be selected
at Memorial Coliseum Monday
night and tlie grand floral parade
begins at 10 a m. Saturday, June
15. Fifteen ships and two sub
marines of tlie U.S. and Cana
dian navies, carrying nearly 3,
000 officers and men, arrive
Wednesday.
VIEWS OPERATION With hit tunqlattas pushed to tht top of hit head, President ,
Ilalani lam AJm latUtm i-t CiaJesa teuLak HAsitl Jkali lAMAlkillM Atlflm M aKiltlliklAli t
rwnnUU y IIIIVill IV num, ihi ! a r w g "tin tyviiii wu wniw y " iMp-tituivui
nd mine fore demonstration!. Th Prasidont was aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty '
Hawk off the coast of Southern California. UPl TelepSoto
TU 4-8111 No. 7163
the union intends to pick us off
one at a time."
Otto Hall, business renrescnta-
live of the local union, contends
that members of tlie union should
be entitled to unemployment bene
fits because the "layoff" was ini
tiated by Weyerhaeuser and is not
the result of a "slrikc."
Sytsma stated that a ruling on
tlie subject must come from the
State Department of Employment
in Salem, but he added that slate
law cites that individuals unom-idispute involving the Wcyerhaeu
ployed as the result of labor dis-lscr Company and the lnlerna
putcs arc not eligible for the bcnc-ltional Association of Machinists
tits.
Whether Weyerhaeuser or thelPersonncl manager of the corn
union moved first is not pertinent PY. & that the timber firm
to the issue, he said. vouA release a statement at 4
. SVeyerhaeuser employe, whoarelP"!'- J"' S
members of the IWA
, . . . . , ,
claim or unemployment in sur
uuj'uiv " -
ance, Sytsma said further.
Hall remarked early today that
lie is instructing members of the
union to file applications or un
employment benefits at the local
employment office pending a rul
ing from the State Department of
Employment in Salem. Later to
day. Sytsma reported that several
members of the union had already
filled out applications for the bene
fits. I
Meanwhile. Hall said tlie union
is in tlie process of working out
an arrangement to provide some
of its members with financial as
sistance to help carry them
through tlie layoff. "Assistance
will be provided solely on Uve
basis of need," Hall said.
Elsewhere, anotlicr labor union
involved in the dispute was also
urging its members to make ap
plication for unemployment in
surance.
In Dunsmuir, N. H. Blankenship.
local agent for the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers Union, hat re
ferred to tlie California Slate Un-
emnlovment Olfice Its 746 mem'
bers alfectcd by the shutdown o!
Polling List
A list of polling placet f t r
county voter on the school If
tue Monday, June 10, are car
ried today 00 Page 311.
III - '" ; 1 '
Weather
AGRICULTURAL FORICAST
Weather continues cool for this flint
In June. Temperatures tonight little
warmer with no frost. 10 par cent chance
ol showers Saturday tvening. Soli tem
perature! is degrees. Haying outlook
good.
the International Paper Company
plant at Weed.
Blankenship said that because
the layoff is due to a "com
pany closure" and is not the re
sult of a strike there will be no
picketing of the plant. Union
members idled by the shutdown
have been instructed to apply for
unemployment benefits at the
Slate Employment Office at
Dunsmuir,
On the matter of a local labor
1 1 Local 1114.11, James Cavanaugh,
and . . , f
imiu uukt m-iienus lJl jis iirciit-
lvtmn.ei.. In. CtJ,.gJn Th
- 1 , ' , ' !J ' ' ' 7
, ... , ,mli.tln. -
reopened between representatives
of tlie two group. The Issue was
to have been aettled yesterday. m
Troops Hold
Upper Hand
In Tehran
TEHRAN. Iran fUPI) - Teh
ran's military governor aaid to
day the shan't army hat crushed
religious rioting which flared for
four dayt and i prepared to fol
low "shoot to kill" orden to
keep the uneasy peace.
"I now am confident order is re
stored," said Gen. Nematollah
Nassirl, the military governor,
"but I (till hold the shah s 'shoot
to kill' order."
Nassirl reported more troop
rioter clashes at the southern city
of Shiraz Thursday night. But be
said the nation' casualty toll in
the rioting remained 88 killed and
193 Injured.
"Minor disturbances vtere
quickly broken up by the troops
with no casualties," Nassirl sdid
of Thursday night Shirai disorders.